The lack of diversity among Oscar nods has, sadly, become tradition and things don't seem to be getting any better. In fact, they're getting worse.

Following in last year's footsteps, not a single actor of color is up for an award this year. The only films featuring a cast with people of color that are nominated this year are "Straight Outta Compton" for Best Screenplay, "What Happened, Miss Simone" for Best Documentary and "Creed" for Best Supporting Actor -- but for these films, only their white contributors were recognized. "The Revenant," whose director, Alejandro González Iñárritu, is Mexican is also nominated. It bypassed actors like Will Smith, for "Concussion," Idris Elba in "Beasts Of No Nation," Samuel L. Jackson in "The Hateful Eight," and Michael B. Jordan and Ryan Coogler for "Creed," all of whom have been heavily praised for their performances this year.

Widespread fury erupted last year by people everywhere who flooded social media with #OscarsSoWhite to voice their frustration with the Academy for recognizing so few actors of color. That hashtag, which was created by twitter user @ReignOfApril, has now resurfaced, bubbling up similar expressions of disappointment by the dismal state of diversity among this year's nods.

"The whole discussion about diversity is a great discussion, because now it's at the top of everybody's mind, not just the academy's," Isaacs said last year during an Academy reception.

And while widespread change is understandably slow to come, there has been no progress in the last year.

However, Isaacs is far from the only person to be held accountable for the lack of representation and recognition of actors of color. Hollywood executives are are mostly white and mostly male and they have failed to prioritize color-conscious casting in their films.

UClA's 2015 Hollywood Diversity report highlights that the problem starts at the top, which is dominated by white, male gatekeepers who run the industry's top three talent agencies and major studios. In 2013, 94 percent of CEOs and/or chairs and 92 percent of senior management in the film industry were white, according to the report.

Meanwhile, Chris Rock will be the host of this year's Academy Awards when it airs on Sunday Feb. 28. Rock, who has been vocal about diversity (and the lack of it) in Hollywood, wrote a viral op-ed in The Hollywood Reporter last year about this very same issue.

"It's a white industry," he wrote. "Just as the NBA is a black industry. I'm not even saying it's a bad thing. It just is."

And while Rock was spot-on about many of his observations, I disagree with one: it IS a bad thing.